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FlyingSquid

@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world

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FlyingSquid,
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It sure seems like they feel that way about social security.

FlyingSquid,
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My mother is pre-Boomer (born soon after the U.S. entered the war) and has been incredibly progressive her entire life. She has never voted for a Republican. She marched for civil rights. She wanted me to know that women and men are equal and that color and religion and ethnicity should not make you dislike someone. She taught me about sex (appropriately) when I asked about it at 3 or 4 years old rather than shielding me from it. My brother and I both have (had in my case, but that’s another story) gay best friends who were also best man at both of our weddings. She always welcomed them even though my brother and his friend became friends in the mid-1980s. I remember asking my mother what she would do if I was gay and she said she would love me no matter what I was. I don’t specifically know her politics, but my dad, born even earlier (1931) was mostly the same way. He definitely had his prejudices- although he would deny it- and he was a lot more sexist than he thought he was, but he was also an outspoken socialist until the dementia got too bad for him to be outspoken about it. One of the last things I was able to tell him before he was too far gone to understand was that Bernie was running for president.

I have certainly had a lot of issues with Boomers and people older than them, but it is far from universal, but I am really proud of my parents for always being progressive.

FlyingSquid,
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Again, my father was a socialist. He wrote a his dissertation on Shaw and the socialist aspects of one of his plays. He was British and said he was never more proud of his homeland then when he helped it usher in the National Health Service with his vote. When I moved here to Terre Haute, Indiana, he made sure to get me to take him to the Eugene V. Debs museum because of how much he admired debs. How does that make him an 80s liberal? Do please explain.

FlyingSquid,
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They got more conservative as they got older. All those hippie kids who protested Vietnam and experimented with drugs and sex ended up voting for Reagan.

FlyingSquid,
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A hell of a lot more than 300,000 people experimented with drugs and protested Vietnam.

FlyingSquid,
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The OED goes very in-depth into etymology in the way other English dictionaries do not. It’s the size of an encyclopedia. This is the print version of the second edition, which has been supplemented several times since:

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/e7fc0cc1-f0a8-44bb-9e29-9fec2f0d8d61.png

FlyingSquid,
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I believe it has charged a fee from the day they first offered the dictionary for online use.

FlyingSquid,
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My father was an academic and the thing academics do when they visit each other’s houses is to bring a bottle of something. So they had a cellar room full of booze. It was awesome when I was in high school in the mid-90s. My parents didn’t drink beer though, so there was no beer in the house except for a six-pack of Michelob at the back of the room that had pull tabs on it. They stopped making pull tabs in 1980. So it was at least 14-year-old beer. It was one of the few things I didn’t think about and/or decide to steal.

FlyingSquid,
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Life was pretty different in the 2000s than it is today. That’s just called time.

FlyingSquid,
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Now you kids know what it was like when 9/11 was in every history textbook by 2002.

FlyingSquid,
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Did you know it changed everything? Because that’s what we were told regularly until about 2010 or so when pretty much everyone had stopped buying it.

FlyingSquid,
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That’s not exactly a huge societal change.

FlyingSquid,
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I haven’t had it in years, but I used to think their crazy bread was the shit. Sorry to hear it’s gotten awful like everything else.

FlyingSquid,
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I remember when you could get a large pizza at Little Caesar’s for $5.

FlyingSquid, (edited )
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It’s gone now and these photos don’t do the scuzziness justice, but-

This was the building. It was so shitty, they razed it to the ground when the place closed.

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/fdbea3b9-6bd4-4c15-8cc0-1242aa1e3337.png

Here’s a picture of the inside which doesn’t show the lack of cleanliness very well.

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/5adbd2f2-a8ea-4f86-97dd-c6879928e41e.png

Also, like every town weirdo ate there for some reason. Which made it good for people watching.

There was a claw machine at the entrance. I kicked ass at that claw machine. I won like 10 stuffed animals to give to my dog to tear into pieces.

EDIT: Also, the fry cook had a Frankenstien’s Monster head. Like he looked like Boris Karloff in the monster make-up except without the bolts. So fucking weird.

FlyingSquid,
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Someone needs to send that video to George Lucas, king of unnecessary double letters at the end of names.

FlyingSquid,
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Yep. I’m from Indiana (I live here again) and we used to go to the Indiana version of the Waffle House and play Risk all night because we were wild and crazy teenagers. It was like Denny’s but scuzzier.

FlyingSquid,
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I didn’t know they made a film out of the story.

FlyingSquid,
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FlyingSquid,
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I’ve only seen four or five of these comics and each one of them is funnier than anything Scott Adams ever put out.

FlyingSquid,
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You know who that actor was? Tim Russ, who played Tuvok on Voyager!

FlyingSquid,
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Thank you! That was awesome!

FlyingSquid,
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There was a show in the 80s called Captain Power and you would use the tie-in toys to shoot at the screen and if your character’s vehicle got shot in the show, the toy would eject them.

My parents wouldn’t get me the toys so I have no idea how well it worked.

FlyingSquid,
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I think so, I’m not quite clear on it either.

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